Synod:
Glasgow Archbishop leads morning prayer at Synod
(Vatican Radio)
The Church must enter the sadness of fractured families with words of love to
heal division and give children peace of heart. This was the moving
reflection offered to Synod Fathers at morning prayer Wednesday by Archbishop
Philipp Tartaglia of Glasgow, Scotland.
He noted that
“when husband and wife are happy together and are blessed with children, then
love expands from two to three and four and five.. And when those things
happen, we are privileged to behold the beauty and simplicity and strength of
married love and of family love, a love which truly through the grace of Christ
endures all things”.
But “when
families fracture, love is the first casualty… Children's peace of heart is
shattered and they find themselves both loving and hating their parents at the
same time”.
“Into this
sadness, the Church has to find a way to speak St Paul’s words of love, which
compassionately excuse and forgive, but which also heal and renew and lift up
again; where forgiveness is not accommodation or indifference but genuine and
sometimes hard-won reconciliation, engendering new trust, new hope, new
endurance, and new faithfulness, a new page in the story of love of husband and
wife and their children”.
Below
please find the full text of Abp. Tartaglia’s reflection at Terce
Recently in
Scotland, we had an independence referendum. It was a simple choice - Yes or
No. In the end, the majority did not choose independence and voted to stay
within the United Kingdom.
The
pre-referendum debate was absorbing, passionate and partisan. Engagement with
the issues was intense. 85% of the electorate cast a vote. The referendum
divided cities, towns, neighbourhoods, families and friends, even husbands and
wives! There were meetings and rallies, and cards and posters everywhere
advocating Yes or No.
Would we ever
come together again after this? Could there possibly be unity again in the
country? Would communities and families and friends be able to reconcile their
differences?
A photograph
which was posted on social media caught the imagination. It was of two family
homes side by side somewhere in Scotland. One displayed a Yes sign and the
other displayed a No sign. And the remarkable thing was that in-between the two
residences, there was a third sign, which read: We love our neighbour. It was a
delightful image, and powerful too, which pierced the tension of the situation
with typical Scottish humour.
“Love is always
patient and kind…love is never rude or selfish”, St Paul teaches us in today’s
text. Paul speaks passionately and eloquently about love. There is nothing
dis-enagaged about this love. Love always has to reach in to the realities, the
practicalities, the sometimes messy circumstances of real life, family,
friendship, work, and politics. “Love is always ready to excuse, to trust, to
hope and to endure whatever comes” says our text. And in the ups and downs of
real life, there can be so much to excuse, so much need for trust, and so often
there is much to endure.
The choice of
readings for weddings includes this text. Preparing for their wedding, spouses
read it and think, “That’s so beautiful. I want my love, our love, to be like
that, patient, and kind, trusting, enduring, faithful, lasting for ever.”
And when husband
and wife are happy together and are blessed with children, then love expands
from two to three and four and five. In a family, there is every opportunity to
be patient and kind and excusing and trusting. There is every opportunity to
renew faithfulness to one another by laughing together, crying together,
supporting one another, saying sorry to one another, giving one another the
benefit of the doubt, embracing one another, being happy for each other, just
knowing the right word at the right time. And when those things happen, we are
privileged to behold the beauty and simplicity and strength of married love and
of family love, a love which truly through the grace of Christ endures all
things.
But when
families fracture, love is the first casualty. The love which was the
glue between spouses turns to hate very quickly. Intimate communion of life is
replaced with a terrible logic of division. Children's peace of heart is
shattered and they find themselves both loving and hating their parents at the
same time.
Into this
sadness, the Church has to find a way to speak St Paul’s words of love, which
compassionately excuse and forgive, but which also heal and renew and lift up
again; where forgiveness is not accommodation or indifference but genuine and
sometimes hard-won reconciliation, engendering new trust, new hope, new
endurance, and new faithfulness, a new page in the story of love of husband and
wife and their children.
St Paul’s
inspiring words on love that we have heard today mean that we must have
compassion for the pain and laceration of the human hearts caught up in
separation, betrayal and divorce. St Paul’s words encourage us to find a way to
uphold God’s holy purpose in marriage and in the family while also upholding
those for whom that purpose has become almost impossible to attain. In times of
distress and misfortune, people still instinctively turn to the Church for hope
and consolation and inspiration. We must not fail them.
On the cross,
Jesus suffered patiently, he excused his executioners, he trusted the Father,
and he opened his arms to embrace and welcome all sinners and all those who are
in pain and anguish. In this sacred mission of divine love, Jesus calls us to
follow him.
XPhilip
Tartaglia
Archbishop of
Glasgow
(Emer McCarthy)

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